Basis theorem (computability)
In computability theory, there are a number of basis theorems. These theorems show that particular kinds of sets always must have some members that are, in terms of Turing degree, not too complicated. One family of basis theorems concern nonempty effectively closed sets (that is, nonempty sets in the arithmetical hierarchy); these theorems are studied as part of classical computability theory. Another family of basis theorems concern nonempty lightface analytic sets (that is, in the analytical hierarchy); these theorems are studied as part of hyperarithmetical theory.
Effectively closed sets
Effectively closed sets are a topic of study in classical computability theory. An effectively closed set is the set of all paths through some computable subtree of the binary tree . These sets are closed, in the topological sense, as subsets of the Cantor space , and the complement of an effective closed set is an effective open set in the sense of effective Polish spaces. Stephen Cole Kleene proved in 1952 that there is a nonempty, effectively closed set with no computable point (Cooper 1999, p. 134). There are basis theorems that show there must be points that are not "too far" from being computable, in an informal sense.
A class is a basis for effectively closed sets if every nonempty effectively closed set includes a member of X (Cooper 2003, p. 329). Basis theorems show that particular classes are bases in this sense. These theorems include (Cooper 1999, p. 134):
- The low basis theorem: each nonempty set has a member that is of r.e. degree.
- The hyperimmune-free basis theorem: each nonempty set has a member that is of hyperimmune-free degree.
- The r.e. basis theorem: each nonempty set has a member that is of r.e. degree.
In the second bullet, a set X has hyperimmune-free degree if every total function from the natural numbers to the natural numbers is dominated by a total computable function.
Lightface analytic sets
There are also basis theorems for lightface sets. These basis theorems are studied as part of hyperarithmetical theory. One theorem is the Gandy basis theorem, which is analogous to the low basis theorem. The Gandy basis theorem shows that each nonempty . set has an element that is hyperarithmetically low, that is, which has the same hyperdegree as Kleene's set .
References
- Cooper, S. B. (1999). "Local degree theory", in Handbook of Computability Theory, E.R. Griffor (ed.), Elsevier, pp. 121–153. ISBN 978-0-444-89882-1
- — (2003), Computability Theory, Chapman-Hall. ISBN 1-584-88237-9
External links
- Simpson, S. "A survey of basis theorems", slides from Computability Theory and Foundations of Mathematics, Tokyo Institute of Technology, February 18–20, 2013.